Cape Canaveral Lighthouse – Throwback Thursday to 1905
Overall view of the Cape Canaveral Lighthouse in 1905.
View shows all the resident houses and outhouses.
The storage shed is hidden behind a small tree.
Off in the background is a man sitting on the roof of the outhouse. The area is surrounded by a white picket fence.
Date: 01/01/1905 (Photo courtesy of NASA).
History of the Cape Canaveral Lighthouse: The historic Cape Canaveral Light on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida serves as a navigational aid for boaters and fishing interests along Florida’s Atlantic coast. The U.S. Coast Guard operates the lighthouse’s beacon the U.S. Air Force owns the lighthouse. The first lighthouse on Cape Canaveral was built near the tip of the Cape in 1848. The structure was only about 60 feet high with a rather dim light powered by whale oil. In 1859, work began nearby on a new, taller iron structure. Construction was halted during the Civil War, and the lighthouse was not finished until 1868. The structure, with a brick lining inside its iron exterior, was painted with its “daymark” black and white horizontal bands in 1873 to make it easier to identify during the day as a navigation point. Between 1892 and 1894, the lighthouse was dismantled and moved to a new location about a mile from the coast, where it stands today.